Mapping Tulsa's new highways

Mapping Tulsa's New Highways, Aerial Photography Will Speed Engineering work on the mapping of Tulsa's new expressways, representatives of the five Tulsa engineering firms handling the project reported at the meeting of the Chamber's Highway committee November 11. Pictured discussing the engineering phases with Bill Henthorne, at right, Highway committee chairman, are Cline Mansur of Owen Mansur & Steele, who is tracing the Southeast expressway route on the map, and from left, Wesley Miller of Wood & Miller Kenneth Cox of Fell & Wheeler Charles Keithline of Craig & Keithline and Lee Hendrix off Lee Hendrix-Engineer. The five firms have joined in forming Associated Expressway Engineers, a corporation, to expedite engineering work for the 101-mile expressways project.

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Mapping Tulsa's New Highways, Aerial Photography Will Speed Engineering work on the mapping of Tulsa's new expressways, representatives of the five Tulsa engineering firms handling the project reported at the meeting of the Chamber's Highway committee November 11. Pictured discussing the engineering phases with Bill Henthorne, at right, Highway committee chairman, are Cline Mansur of Owen Mansur & Steele, who is tracing the Southeast expressway route on the map, and from left, Wesley Miller of Wood & Miller Kenneth Cox of Fell & Wheeler Charles Keithline of Craig & Keithline and Lee Hendrix off Lee Hendrix-Engineer. The five firms have joined in forming Associated Expressway Engineers, a corporation, to expedite engineering work for the 101-mile expressways project.

Preservation and archiving of this significant Tulsa treasure of photographs and artifacts was made possible through the Tulsa City-County Library and the Tulsa Historical Society, and the generosity of Tulsa World/Lorton Family, Chester Cadieux, the Rotary Club of Tulsa, and many other community-minded corporations, institutions, and individuals.